Transient uplift after a 17th-century earthquake along the Kuril trench

Publication type

Journal Article

Abstract

In eastern Hokkaido, 60 to 80 kilometers above a subducting oceanic plate, tidal mudflats changed into freshwater forests during the first decades after a 17th-century tsunami. The mudflats gradually rose by a meter, as judged from fossil diatom assemblages. Both the tsunami and the ensuing uplift exceeded any in the region’s 200 years of written history, and both resulted from a shallow plate-boundary earthquake of unusually large size along the Kuril subduction zone. This earthquake probably induced more creep farther down the plate boundary than did any of the region’s historical events.

Publication Details

Journal

Science

Volume

306

Pagination

1918-1920

Date Published

12/2004

Identifiers

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